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Central Europe

Richard Robinson Orcid Logo, Julian Preece Orcid Logo

Europe in British Literature and Culture, Pages: 53 - 69

Swansea University Authors: Richard Robinson Orcid Logo, Julian Preece Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1017/9781009425483.006

Abstract

This chapter answers the question ’does central Europe exist?’ by first drawing a literary-historical line between Franz Kafka and Milan Kundera, focusing particularly on the critical tensions in Kundera’s construction of a vanished culture and on the West’s mythologizing of central Europe. It then...

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Published in: Europe in British Literature and Culture
ISBN: 9781009425490 9781009425483
Published: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2024
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67858
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Abstract: This chapter answers the question ’does central Europe exist?’ by first drawing a literary-historical line between Franz Kafka and Milan Kundera, focusing particularly on the critical tensions in Kundera’s construction of a vanished culture and on the West’s mythologizing of central Europe. It then turns to two Prague-set novels, Bruce Chatwin’s Utz, which explores the condition of stubborn aesthetic individualism under communism, and Tom McCarthy’s Men in Space, set in the months following the splitting-up of Czechoslovakia in 1992. Beyond the Czech lands, the Austrian Ingeborg Bachmann’s Malina, a significant work of avant-garde feminism, offers a doomed fantasy of post-war Austro-Hungarian relationships. Olga Tokarczuk’s Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead, set in the Polish–Silesian borderlands, is a revenge thriller whose narrator is inspired by the radicalism of William Blake. These case studies signal the ways central Europe has been confabulated by British writers; they also show how an evolving canon of fiction-in-translation is appropriately pluralizing and updating the West’s idea of the ‘middle’.
Keywords: Central Europe; Austro-Hungarian Empire; Franz Kafka; Milan Kundera; Ingeborg Bachmann; Olga Tokarczuk; Bruce Chatwin; Tom McCarthy; communism; feminism
College: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Start Page: 53
End Page: 69